The present invention relates to bag-in-box style cartons and containers, of the type in which a non-self-supporting plastic bag or the like is positioned in a surrounding, supporting container structure, the entire package being disposable after a single use. The present invention also relates to a multiple bags-in-box style cartons and containers. The present invention also relates to large volume urn-style beverage containers.
Urn-style beverage containers, for the containment and controlled incremental dispensing of a relatively large volume (2+gallons) of liquid are known. Typically, such urn-style beverage containers are reusable devices of metal and plastic, which can be heavy, and which, of course, require cleaning after each use. Various versions of such devices are known as “pump pots”; “air pots”; various all-plastic urns (sold under the registered trademark “CamServers”) and buckets with spigots, both manufactured by Cambro Manufacturing Company of Huntington Beach, Calif. There are also known in the art octagonal and rectangular cross-section bag-in corrugated paperboard box configurations, such as those sold by BIB Pak, Inc., of Racine, Wis. The rectangular bag-in-box construction is also shown in Geshay, U.S. Pat. No. 6,062,431, owned by BIB Pak, Inc., of Racine, Wis.
Retail and wholesale (catering) food service operators typically have need of such large volume beverage containers. However, permanent, reusable urns may be subject to various disadvantages and/or impose certain costs of operation, upon retail customers and/or retail and wholesale food service operators. For example, caterers must address the need to physically retrieve the urns, requiring expenditures of labor and fuel. The urns must be cleaned and stored, again requiring expenditures of labor, cleaning supplies, and storage space. Reusable urns are often the subject of theft or “mysterious” disappearance, imposing unscheduled replacement costs, as well as the replacement costs associated with the cycling out of units as a result of normal wear and tear. If units are lost/stolen or in disrepair, the business operator runs the risk of lost sales.
In one aspect, a dispensing container for dispensing fluent material is provided. The dispensing container includes a generally tubular body having a front wall, a rear wall and two opposing sidewalls. The generally tubular body further includes an upper portion forming an upper opening and a closure structure disposed proximate the upper opening. The closure structure includes a handle in a recessed position within the upper opening. The generally tubular body further includes a plurality of spout apertures disposed in one of the sidewalls and at least one inner flow prompting ramp positioned within the generally tubular body. The at least one inner flow prompting ramp includes a lower end disposed adjacent the sidewall in which the plurality of spout apertures are disposed and a higher end disposed adjacent the opposite sidewall. The generally tubular body is formed from a first blank of at least one of the following materials: paper; paperboard; or corrugated paperboard.
In another aspect, a dispensing container for dispensing fluent material is provided. The dispensing container includes a body having a front wall, a back wall and two opposing sidewalls, and defining a vertical axis extending substantially parallel with the front wall, a depth axis extending substantially perpendicular to the front wall, and a transverse axis extending substantially parallel with the front wall and substantially perpendicular to the vertical axis. The body further includes an upper portion including an upper opening and an upper edge. The body further includes a closure structure disposed proximate the upper opening. The closure structure includes a handle structure positioned substantially parallel with the depth axis in a recessed position within the upper opening and extending substantially parallel with the vertical axis no higher than the upper edge. The body further includes a plurality of spout apertures operably disposed in one sidewall of the two opposing sidewalls.
In the description below, some embodiments describe a container having a single tubular body with one ramp and one nozzle such that the single tubular body can retain one beverage bag. In another embodiment, the container includes a single tubular body with more than one ramp, more than one beverage bag, and more than one nozzle such that the container may house a plurality of fluent products within the more than one bags. As such, at least some embodiments described below are configured to retain multiple beverage bags.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the present invention is directed to a dispensing container, operably configured to be positioned upon a substantially flat, horizontal surface, for the facilitated dispensing of at least one fluent material. The dispensing container comprises a generally tubular body, having a vertical axis, a depth axis and a transverse axis. A closure structure is disposed proximate an opening in an upper portion of the tubular body. The closure structure includes a handle structure, which is disposed in a recessed position within an upper opening of the generally tubular body and extending no higher than an upper edge region of the generally tubular body. The generally tubular body further has a plurality of sidewalls. At least one spout aperture is operably disposed in one of the plurality of sidewalls.
At least one inner flow prompting ramp is operably positioned within the generally tubular body. The inner flow prompting ramp has a lower end, disposed adjacent the sidewall of the generally tubular body in which the at least one spout aperture is disposed, and a higher end, disposed adjacent an opposite sidewall thereto, and an inclined surface extending between the lower end and the upper end. The lower end of the inner flow prompting ramp is disposed at a distance above the bottom of the generally tubular body approximately equal to the distance between the bottom of the generally tubular body and a bottom peripheral region of the spout aperture. The generally tubular body is preferably formed from a first blank of at least one of the following materials: paper; paperboard; corrugated paperboard.
In a preferred embodiment, the generally tubular body comprises a front wall, a rear wall disposed parallel to the front wall, and two sidewalls, disposed parallel to one another, perpendicular to the front and rear walls and extending therebetween.
The closure structure preferably comprises first and second foldable sidewall top flaps, emanating from top edge regions of the sidewalls. Each of the first and second foldable sidewall top flaps preferably includes a first panel, foldably connected to one of the sidewalls, and positioned at an acute included angle relative thereto. Each of the first and second foldable sidewall top flaps preferably includes a second panel, foldably connected to one of the first panels, each of the second panels being folded upwardly, parallel to the sidewalls and in juxtaposed overlying relation to one another, the second panels having top edges that are disposed no higher than the upper edge region of the generally tubular body. A foldable front wall top flap emanates from a top edge region of the front wall. A foldable rear wall top flap emanates from a top edge region of the rear wall. The foldable front and rear wall top flaps each includes first panels, foldably connected to the front and rear walls, respectively, and positioned substantially perpendicular thereto. The foldable front and rear wall top flaps each further include second panels, foldably connected to the respective first panels of the front and rear wall top flaps, and emanating downwardly therefrom, the second panels of the front and rear wall top flaps being disposed in positions interengaging with the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps, to preclude undesired dislodgement of the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps.
In another embodiment, the present invention includes an insulating panel to divide the tubular body into two separate compartments. The insulating panel allows a first compartment to house a bag having a first fluid at a first temperature while a second compartment houses a bag having a second fluid at a second temperature. The first and second temperatures may be different. The insulating panel is configured to facilitate maintaining the first and second temperatures such that heat loss between the two bags is reduced. In another embodiment, the tubular body is divided into a plurality of compartments each having a bag housed therein.
The closure structure preferably further comprises at least one slot in each of the first panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps. Preferably, at least one hooked tab emanates from each of the first panels of the front and rear wall top flaps. The hooked tabs are preferably configured to be engagingly received in the slots, when the second panels of the front and rear wall top flaps are folded over into interengagement with the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps.
Preferably, the closure structure further comprises at least one notch in each of the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps, the notches being aligned with one another when the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps are parallel to the sidewalls and in juxtaposed overlying relation to one another. A notch in at least one of the front and rear wall top flaps is operably configured to interengage with the aligned notches in the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps, when the second panels of the front and rear wall top flaps are folded over into interengagement with the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps.
Preferably, the handle structure comprises a hand opening aperture disposed in one of the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps. A hingedly connected push-out flap is preferably disposed in the other of the second panels of the first and second sidewall top flaps. The push-out flap preferably has a peripheral contour substantially conforming to the peripheral contour of the hand opening aperture. The push out flap is configured to be pushed through the hand opening aperture, and upwardly relative thereto, to provide a grasping opening. The inner flow prompting ramp preferably is formed from a second blank fabricated from at least one of the following materials: paper; paperboard; corrugated paperboard.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the at least one inner flow prompting ramp is formed from a separate second blank of foldable material, which is insertably received into the generally tubular body. In one embodiment of the invention, the inner flow prompting ramp is formed from a substantially cruciform blank having a central rectangular panel, rectangular panels emanating from front and rear edge regions of the central panel, and trapezoidal panels emanating from side edges of the central panel. In one embodiment of the invention, the substantially cruciform blank further includes foldable support panels emanating from side edges of the panels emanating from the front and rear edge regions of the central panel. In another embodiment of the invention, the substantially cruciform blank further includes interlocking bottom panels emanating from side edge regions of the trapezoidal panels.
In another embodiment of the invention, the substantially cruciform blank further includes inwardly folding triangular gusset panel pairs foldably connecting side edge regions of the rectangular panels emanating from the front and rear edge regions of the central panel to end edge regions of the trapezoidal panels emanating from the side edge regions of the central panel.
In an embodiment of the invention, the at least one inner flow prompting ramp is formed from a blank comprising a central rectangular panel; trapezoidal side panels emanating from outside edges of the central panel; rectangular bottom panels, emanating from outside edges of the trapezoidal side panels; center support panels emanating from outside edges of the rectangular bottom panels; and inside inclined panels emanating from outside edges of the rectangular bottom panels. The ramp is formed upon successive inward folding of outermost ones of the panels, so that the trapezoidal side panels are folded perpendicular to the central rectangular panel, the rectangular bottom panels are folded perpendicular to the trapezoidal side panels, the center support panels are folded perpendicular to the rectangular bottom panels, and the inside inclined panels are folded perpendicular to the center support panels, and in underlying parallel juxtaposed relation to the central rectangular panel. A pivotable interlocking tab is disposed in one of the rectangular bottom panels and an aperture disposed in the other of the rectangular bottom panels for receiving the pivotable interlocking tab, for maintaining the blank in its articulated configuration.
In an embodiment of the invention, the at least one inner flow prompting ramp comprises a member foldably formed from at least one extension of, and connected to, the first blank.
The dispensing container preferably further comprises front and rear wall bottom flaps, connected to bottom edge regions of the front and rear walls, respectively. First and second sidewall bottom flaps are connected to bottom edge regions of the first and second sidewalls, respectively. Each of the first and second sidewall bottom flaps preferably includes a pivotable engagement flap, which is affixed to an outside surface of one of the front and rear bottom wall flaps. The generally tubular body in a preferred embodiment is operably configured such that when the closure structure is open, the generally tubular body may be articulated between a collapsed configuration, in which the front wall and one sidewall are disposed in juxtaposed overlying adjacent orientation to the other sidewall and the rear wall, with the front and rear wall bottom flaps being folded up inside a bottom opening region of the generally tubular body, in juxtaposed relation to inside bottom surfaces of the front and rear walls, respectively, and the respective pivotable engagement flaps are folded back upon their respective first and second sidewall bottom flaps; and an articulated position, wherein the front and rear walls are parallel to each other and perpendicular to the sidewalls, whereupon articulation from the collapsed configuration, the first and second sidewall bottom flaps and their respective attached front and rear wall bottom panels are automatically prompted to move into partial overlapping relation to the front and rear wall bottom flaps to define a bottom for the articulated dispensing container.
Preferably, the first and second sidewall bottom flaps further each include engagement tabs which interlock, upon articulation, to maintain the first and second sidewall bottom flaps and the front and rear bottom flaps in their partially overlapping, bottom defining orientation.
The dispensing container preferably further comprises at least one inner bag, operably configured for containing a liquid, and at least one spout structure, operably associated with the bag, configured to be passed through at least one spout aperture, upon placement of the inner bag within the generally tubular body. A dispensing spigot preferably is operably configured to be positioned on the at least one spout structure, after passage of the at least one spout structure through the at least one spout aperture of the generally tubular body.
In a preferred embodiment, at least one locking member is operably configured for engaging the spout structure, after placement of the spout structure through the spout aperture of the generally tubular body, for precluding removal of the spout structure from the spout aperture.
In an alternative preferred embodiment of the invention, at least one further spout aperture is operably disposed in one of the plurality of sidewalls.
In another alternative embodiment, the tubular body is divided into multiple sections by insulating panels. The multiple sections each include a ramp directed towards a spout aperture in the tubular body. Each multiple section is configured to receive a beverage bag containing a spout structure such that the spout structure is received through the aperture of the tubular body. The insulating panel is configured to enable a first compartment to house a bag having a first fluid at a first temperature while a second compartment houses a bag having a second fluid at a second temperature. Furthermore, the multiple ramps may be ramped at different directions such that the multiple spout structures are received through different sides of the tubular body. In another embodiment, the tubular body is divided into a plurality of compartments by a plurality of insulating panels wherein each compartment includes a ramp, a beverage bag and a spout structure for dispensing the beverage.
While this invention is susceptible of embodiments in many different forms, there are shown in the drawings and will be described in detail, several specific embodiments, with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the embodiments illustrated.
As explained below,
In preferred embodiments of the invention, each of the blanks illustrated herein, in
In accordance with the usual conventions regarding the illustration of blanks of foldable material, unless otherwise expressly indicated, solid lines within the interior of a blank represent through-cuts or apertures, and broken or dotted lines represent lines of weakness, such as score lines, perforations, or the like.
A blank 10 for the outer shell for the bag-in-box of the present invention is illustrated in
To form the outer shell of the bag-in-box beverage container of the present invention, when blank 10 is formed into a tube by gluing flap 90 to front panel 12, front bottom flap 14, first sidewall bottom flap 30, rear bottom flap 54 and second sidewall bottom flap 68 are folded inwardly, and upwardly of the bottom edges of front wall 12, first sidewall 28, rear wall 52 and second sidewall 66. Tabs 72 and 34 are glued to adjacent panels 54 and 14, respectively. When set up, opposing flaps 68 and 30 are interlocked at the notches formed between tabs 32, 34 and 20, 72, respectively. Tabs 32, 70 are on the “inside” facing the interior of the resulting shell structure. See also subfigs. 3 and 4 of
Because the interior liquid holding structure is a non-self-supporting flexible bag, a structure is required to prompt the liquid to flow toward the spout (see
Once the inner flow promoting ramp has been inserted into the outer shell, the inner containment bag/closure assembly, which may be of any suitable design, is prepared for insertion into the outer shell. In one embodiment of the invention, the bag/closure assembly will be formed as a polyethylene (or other suitable food-grade plastic material) bag, at one end of which is attached an outwardly threaded male spout member, which will typically have two axially spaced apart radially extending collars or rings, each of which is smaller in diameter than the large diameter portion of the keyhole openings of spout locking tabs 62, 64, but which is greater in diameter to the smaller diameter portion of the keyhole openings. Typically, a dust cap is threaded onto the spout member to prevent contamination of the interior of the bag during shipping and storage. Referring to FIGS. 5-7-5-10, the bag/closure assembly is prepared by removing the dust cap, expanding or “fluffing” the bag by pulling apart the (typically) folded over bag portion.
The outer shell is then closed by folding panels 38, 76 inwardly and down into the top opening of the outer shell, while folding panels 40 and 78 upwardly. Panels 40 and 78 will be juxtaposed parallel to and against one another, in a vertical orientation.
If the bag-in-box beverage container is not to be immediately used, it may be stored, upon returning the dust cap to its position screwed onto the male spout member. Filling of the container is demonstrated in
Once the contents have been consumed, the bag-in-box beverage container is broken down for disposal and recycling essentially by reversing the foregoing procedure.
The bag-in-box beverage container of the present invention is believed to embody a number of advantages over prior art containers, even including prior art corrugated containers, such as facilitated assembly and readiness; facilitated filling of the internal bag; facilitated handling and delivery, via the recessed and locked-in-place handle; easy knock-down for recycling; the ability to employ a wide variety of existing taps and spigots; the provision of a level, flat top profile to permit stacking of stored containers, and even limited stacking of filled containers.
To form the outer shell of the bag-in-box beverage container of the present invention, when blank 910 is formed into a tube by gluing flap 990 to front panel 912, front panel bottom flap 914, first side panel bottom flap 930, rear panel bottom flap 955 and second side panel bottom flap 968 are folded inwardly, and upwardly of the bottom edges of front panel 912, first side panel 928, rear panel 954 and second side panel 966. Tabs 972 and 934 are glued to adjacent panels 955 and 914, respectively. When set up, opposing flaps 968 and 930 are interlocked at the notches formed between tabs 932, 934 and 920, 972, respectively. Tabs 932, 970 are on the “inside” facing the interior of the resulting shell structure.
To form the bag-in-box beverage container of the present invention, first side panel, front panel, second side panel, and rear panel are folded into a tubular shaped and glued together via a glue flap (not shown). When set up panels 918, 920, 938, 940, 958, 960, 976, and 978 are folded inward and connected using tabs and slots (see
In another embodiment, bag-in-box beverage container 1000 is configured to have a plurality of compartments wherein each compartment includes a ramp, and a beverage bag.
Because the interior liquid holding structure is a non-self-supporting flexible bag, a structure is required to prompt the liquid to flow toward the spout (see
Insulating panel 2200 divides the beverage container 1000 into two sections such that two beverage bags can be received therein. When the beverage bags are inserted, inner flow prompting ramps 2150 direct fluid in the bags towards spouts attached to the bags and inserted through apertures 951. Insulating panel 2200 further allows the two bags to contain fluent material and facilitates reducing heat transfer between the two bags such that the temperature of the fluent material in each bag is better maintained.
After the inner flow prompting ramp 2150 and beverage bags are inserted, beverage container 1000 can be closed by folding panels 916, 936, 956, and 974 inward. Tabs 946, and 948 are interlocked with tabs 984 and 986 (See
The foregoing description and drawings merely explain and illustrate the invention and the invention is not limited thereto, as those skilled in the art who have the disclosure before them will be able to make modifications and variations therein without departing from the scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/293,878 filed Nov. 13, 2002 entitled “Bag-in-Box Beverage Container”, which is also assigned to the assignee of the present Application and which is also hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10293878 | Nov 2002 | US |
Child | 11318304 | Dec 2005 | US |